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Increasing Connection + Sensation with Adrian Grenier
Episode 5228th March 2023 • Mind, Body, and Soil • Kate Kavanaugh
00:00:00 01:19:52

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So many of us have had the experience of nature, of farming, bringing us back to ourselves. Adrian Grenier’s story isn’t much different - several years ago he found himself disconnected and in a state of constantly numbing. Coming back to the idea of ‘chop wood, carry water’ he came home to a place after changing just about everything. Adrian and I talk about the nature of disconnection and the connection we can find in nature. We start with the idea that everything has to die - even versions of ourselves - in order to nourish our future, where we might even find ourselves in the infinite. One of Adrian’s philosophies is to constantly be increasing sensation and connection - so we dive into just what that might mean on a practical level. Adrian is an apprentice of the land and exploring what it means to live at Earth Speed. 

Find Adrian:

Instagram: @adriangrenier, @earthspeed

Earth Speed on YouTube


Other Great Interviews with Adrian: 

Adrian Grenier on the Meat Mafia


Timestamps:

00:00:00: Introducing Adrian and how we met 

00:10:30: Spring sets some themes of death, rebirth, renewal, transformation

00:12:37: Finding future self in the infinite 

00:18:30: Death of versions of ourselves 

00:20:30: Chop wood, carry water - connecting to nature 

00:26:35: Increasing sensation and connection 

00:35:00: Connecting to intuition 

00:41:00: Being an apprentice to the land

00:46:05: Living at the cadence of earth speed 

00:55:40: Feeling at home in earth + our current isolation

01:07:32: Starting with small solutions


Books Mentioned:

Matter and Desire: An Erotic Ecology



Current Discounts for MBS listeners:

  • 15% off Farm True ghee and body care products using code: KATEKAV15
  • 20% off Home of Wool using code KATEKAVANAUGH for 10% off
  • 15% off Bon Charge blue light blocking gear using code: MINDBODYSOIL15


Mind, Body, and Soil

Find Kate: @kate_kavanaugh

Podcast disclaimer can be found by visiting: groundworkcollective.com/disclaimer

Transcripts

Kate:

Howdy.

Kate:

I'm Kate Kavanaugh, and you're listening to the Mind, body and Soil Podcast where

Kate:

we're laying the groundwork for our land, ourselves, and for generations

Kate:

to come By looking at the way every threat of life is connected to one

Kate:

another, communities above ground, near the communities, below the soil, which

Kate:

mirror the vast community of the cosmos.

Kate:

As the saying goes, as above so below, join me as we take a curious journey

Kate:

into agriculture, biology, history, spirituality, health, and so much more.

Kate:

I can't wait to unearth all of these incredible topics alongside you.

Kate:

Hello everyone and welcome to the Mind, body and Soil Podcast where we are

Kate:

exploring the threads of what it means to be humans woven into this earth.

Kate:

I am your host, Kate Kavanaugh, and it is such a pleasure to be

Kate:

here with you each and every.

Kate:

Here on the podcast, it is my pleasure to host such a wide range of guests as

Kate:

we explore things that are sometimes related to regenerative agriculture,

Kate:

to spirituality, to our experiences as humans here on earth as it relates to

Kate:

death oftentimes, and my guest today, Feel a little bit out of left field for you.

Kate:

So I wanna provide just a little bit of context at the front of this.

Kate:

Back in December, I had the pleasure of going out to Fredericksburg, Texas and

Kate:

doing a butchery demo with the folks at Force of Nature meets on Rome Ranch.

Kate:

And it was a really incredible opportunity for me to share a little bit about

Kate:

physiology and ecology and nutrition, all rolled into the sort of connecting

Kate:

to ourselves through Earth Package that I liked to roll things into.

Kate:

And one of the guests there at the time was Adrian Grier and we

Kate:

connected there and enjoyed a little bit of back and forth after that.

Kate:

And so I decided to have him on the podcast to talk a

Kate:

little bit about his journey.

Kate:

Now, as you might know, if you have listened to this podcast

Kate:

before, I love to leave.

Kate:

Where other people have really covered a guest and go off the beaten path.

Kate:

And so I've included in the show notes a couple of episodes where Adrian really

Kate:

talks about his background because you might be thinking, what does this have

Kate:

to do with agriculture or with earth?

Kate:

But the Adrian's trajectory is deeply related to that.

Kate:

And his, his journey is something that he has been really gracious in

Kate:

sharing on several different podcasts and exploring some really vulnerable

Kate:

topics on how he sort of left his celebrity lifestyle to move to a

Kate:

ranch in Texas with his wife Jordan.

Kate:

And so I encourage you to check those out if you want a little bit

Kate:

of background since Adrian and I really dive right into the deep end.

Kate:

One of the things I feel like I'm continually noticing as I interview guests

Kate:

on the podcast is that our connection and relationship to nature changes us.

Kate:

It changes the trajectory of our lives.

Kate:

It changes the way we view the world, and that is incredibly powerful and I think

Kate:

that it is reflective of our return to our return to being in place in the ecosystem,

Kate:

and we really cover in this podcast just how powerful that change can be.

Kate:

This is a really special podcast because this marks the one year anniversary

Kate:

of the Mind, body and Soil Podcast.

Kate:

This is episode of 52 and we launched on March 29th, 2022, and so this is the

Kate:

one year anniversary, and I just want to reflect what a wild ride this year has in.

Kate:

For those of you that have been listening for a while, you'll know that this

Kate:

podcast has been in my heart for many, many years, and it is, it has been.

Kate:

The biggest blossoming and opening and unfurling for me to put this out

Kate:

into the world, and it has challenged me in so many different ways.

Kate:

It has challenged my very anxious nature and the anxiety I feel.

Kate:

Every time I turn on this microphone.

Kate:

It has challenged.

Kate:

Me to grow and to grow past a lot of the perfectionism that I think held me

Kate:

back in those years where I was dreaming of doing this without hitting record.

Kate:

It has also gifted me with some of the most beautiful friendships and human

Kate:

connections that I had not anticipated.

Kate:

I have struggled my whole life with connecting with people, and in this last

Kate:

year, I have found more friends, made more connections, and had the opportunity to.

Kate:

Go in the deep end with people, which has really been, I think part of what

Kate:

has held me back in my life is that I'm just not very good at small talk.

Kate:

And so it has been incredible to share this journey with you, and that

Kate:

is what I really want to highlight in this, that this has been a shared

Kate:

journey of reciprocity as I have embarked on these conversations with

Kate:

guests and gotten the incredible response and feedback and dreams.

Kate:

From you listeners for this podcast.

Kate:

It's my relationship with you that really drives my curiosity each week

Kate:

for us to open up these doors and, you know, pure under these rocks and

Kate:

peek behind the curtain together.

Kate:

Thank you so much for listening from the bottom of my heart.

Kate:

It, it has, it has changed every fiber of my being and I am so grateful to bring

Kate:

you this podcast each and every week.

Kate:

With that being said, I would love to invite you if this podcast

Kate:

has made an impact on your life to leave a reading and review.

Kate:

As some of you will know in exchange for your reviews, if you wanna send me

Kate:

a little screenshot of your review on Apple Podcasts, I would love to send you

Kate:

a handwritten thank you card so that we can connect here in the tangible plane.

Kate:

And with that, I'm gonna read a really beautiful review that I received this

Kate:

week that really just warmed my heart.

Kate:

So Sammy Miller, thank you.

Kate:

It's titled, truly Decadent Conversations.

Kate:

I am finally sitting down to write this review, and perhaps the first

Kate:

thing I should mention is that I'm actually not a routine podcast listener.

Kate:

I've always been much more drawn to audiobooks and following long stories

Kate:

that take me elsewhere, but this podcast has converted me and I really

Kate:

look forward to the rich and decadent conversations, Kate Chairs each week.

Kate:

What you, me to this podcast with Kate's voice is, I've heard it through Instagram

Kate:

and the fact that the curiosity and interest she shares online have a much

Kate:

more in-depth capacity in this form.

Kate:

I've always been interested in agriculture and food nutrition and have worked on

Kate:

and off in these industries, so naturally this was bound to be a fit for me.

Kate:

However, I've been so pleasantly surprised and delighted at the

Kate:

additional topics explored here.

Kate:

Just when you think, oh, this episode will be about fat, or salt or joy,

Kate:

you realize the journey is taking you to unexpected, vital and interesting

Kate:

corners you'd never thought to explore.

Kate:

I find myself thinking about the conversation often

Kate:

afterwards and interested to continue exploring on my own.

Kate:

In short, I can't recommend this podcast enough.

Kate:

Every episode taps into so much more than what can be relayed through

Kate:

a title, so listen to them all.

Kate:

I'm so glad I have, and thank you, Kate, for sharing your thoughts,

Kate:

questions, and passions with us.

Kate:

Sammy, I can't tell you what this review did to my soul.

Kate:

It was.

Kate:

Like a light for me, and I love that you enjoy these rich

Kate:

and decadent conversations.

Kate:

I know that one of my concerns when I started this podcast was how long

Kate:

form I wanted it to be, that I really enjoy diving deep with guests, and

Kate:

sometimes it takes couple of hours, maybe more for those conversations to

Kate:

unfurl, and so I'm so glad that that is resonating with so many of you.

Kate:

I think that so much nuance and so much joy and so much depth can be

Kate:

unpacked when we allow something, the time and space that it deserves.

Kate:

I am always grateful to be here with each and every one of you.

Kate:

There are some affiliate links in the show notes it, which is

Kate:

one way to support this podcast.

Kate:

If you enjoy it and you would like to pick up some wool pillows or a wool

Kate:

comforter or some red light therapy devices or some really amazing grass-fed,

Kate:

gee, I have affiliate codes for those and they help support the podcast.

Kate:

You can also find me on my, where I am writing a little bit each

Kate:

and every week, and a subscription also supports this podcast.

Kate:

Those are the ways that you can support, and I just want to tell

Kate:

you all thank you from the bottom of my heart for participating in

Kate:

the Mind, body, and Soil Collective.

Kate:

I am so excited to bring you this interview with Adrian Grier.

Kate:

I hope you enjoy it.

Kate:

So I didn't realize when we booked this, that we were recording on the spring

Kate:

equinox, and as I was creating this interview, it felt really, felt really

Kate:

fortuitous or auspicious that that was the case as I kind of dove into these

Kate:

themes of death, transformation, sensation and rebirth and regeneration, and Mm.

Kate:

Realized that this morning.

Kate:

Yes.

Kate:

Oh, this is perfect timing.

Adrian:

Yes.

Adrian:

Beautiful.

Adrian:

Uh, I, yeah, I did not realize that either, but now that you

Adrian:

said it, I, I, I, I felt it Yeah.

Adrian:

It was in

Kate:

the air.

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

A little bit of a shift.

Kate:

Sort of a, it's the new year in, in more land-based traditions that this is

Kate:

the, this is the beginning of the year.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

I am not that sophisticated as of yet here on the land.

Adrian:

I, I did try to plant, uh, within the moon cycles, . Yeah.

Adrian:

But that, that proved just to be a little bit, uh, too advanced for me.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

We don't, it

Kate:

was too advanced for me too

Kate:

. Adrian: We can't do that.

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

I tried though.

Kate:

I did try.

Kate:

I I can, yeah.

Kate:

I contemplated it and I was like, oh, but that, that lands on a Tuesday.

Kate:

I can't do Tuesday

Kate:

. Kate: It's not convenient for me.

Kate:

Yeah, I understand that.

Kate:

We don't, we don't plant on bloomer cycles.

Kate:

I have a quote for us to start off with, and it's actually something that's

Kate:

been really resonant for me in my life, and I wonder if it resonates with you.

Kate:

If it doesn't, just throw it away, start somewhere else.

Kate:

But it's from Confucius and it's, we have two lives, and the second begins

Kate:

when we realize we only have one and.

Kate:

It's a great quote.

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

This was a really big quote for me.

Kate:

I had a moment where I realized that I only had one, and that

Kate:

the trajectory I was going down wasn't where I wanted to be.

Kate:

And as I listened to all these interviews with you, I was really struck at

Kate:

that moment for any of us where we decide to, to make a u-turn, where

Kate:

we see that, that realization that we only get this one precious life.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Um, , I don't wanna start out the podcast by pushing back on, uh, on

Adrian:

Confucius, , , but I, I, you know, I don't know if I, uh, necessarily agree, I

Adrian:

think there's probably a third life that we come into because I, I realized that,

Adrian:

that I actually am infinite, that I'm an infinite being and that I have forever.

Adrian:

To be creative, so I don't have to rush.

Adrian:

I don't have to, I don't have to do it all at once.

Adrian:

The, the thing that motivated me for the, my, I guess my twenties and my

Adrian:

thirties was I need to eat everything, taste everything, do everything,

Adrian:

have everything, consume as much as possible and accumulate because this

Adrian:

is my one time and I need to do it all now, because when I die, that's it.

Adrian:

So there was this nihilism baked into my personality and my,

Adrian:

my perspective, my worldview.

Adrian:

So there's a desperation and, and a, a fear of death.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

sort of baked into everything I was doing.

Adrian:

And then when I realized that I like I can live again and that I will live

Adrian:

again, I wanted to start making the world.

Adrian:

Better for that me that gets to be born into the world in the future.

Adrian:

So, and, and whether that's me in the ex exact form or if it's me embodied

Adrian:

in my children, or it's just that collective conscience that gets to

Adrian:

continuously come back and be reborn.

Adrian:

Uh, I realize that there's a conversation to be had between the me that exists

Adrian:

today in this physical form and that future self and, and Confucius is that,

Adrian:

you know, look, it had a nice ring to it.

Adrian:

I'm gonna actually have to workshop my one liner

Adrian:

. Kate: Uh, I really liked that pushback

Adrian:

this conversation that we're having with our future selves through this act of.

Adrian:

Transformation.

Adrian:

And I think one of the things that comes up for me a lot on the farm is this idea

Adrian:

of transformation of energy and matter continuously into one another, right?

Adrian:

That the, the soil and these rocks that are just, you know, stardust compressed

Adrian:

by deep time are pulling up minerals.

Adrian:

That's going into plants, that's going into animals that I'm

Adrian:

eating, that I'm taking care of.

Adrian:

And then eventually I'm going back into that same cycle.

Adrian:

And I think within that there is that infiniteness that we are made

Adrian:

up of particles, that were a part of the singularity of the big bang.

Adrian:

And so there is no, there is no beginning and no end to us necessarily.

Adrian:

And I think that that realization, and I don't, I haven't reached the space where

Adrian:

fear of death still isn't present for me.

Adrian:

But I think when we reach that, that space of understanding the infinite, it changes

Adrian:

the way that we want to be in the world.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Uh, you know, I, I guess my quote would be because life is infinite.

Adrian:

It's never too late to make a change, you know, and I, I feel like sometimes,

Adrian:

um, we sort of double down on all the tricks and identities that we've

Adrian:

established at one time, and we're afraid to change because it feels hard or it

Adrian:

feels like it's gonna take time or, you know, I, I feel like it's, it's always

Adrian:

it to connect into that creativity and that spontaneity and that potential.

Adrian:

You have to be willing to let go of all the things, all the mistakes that

Adrian:

you've made are all the things that you've tried for a, a newer, better way.

Adrian:

And if, if you have that time pressure and that anxiety, you

Adrian:

may not give yourself permission.

Adrian:

I mean, I, I see a lot of people my age.

Adrian:

Who are like, oh, you know, I, I, it is like what a midlife crisis is, right?

Adrian:

Like, uh, I like it wasted my life to me.

Adrian:

I've just been born and I have now I, I plan to live at least another

Adrian:

50, 60 years, so I can now enter into a whole new iteration of my life.

Adrian:

But now from a more intentional, A more conscious place, like I'm

Adrian:

actually making decisions for the first time in my life that are my own.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

I'm not, you know, listening to mommy, you know, when I'm a baby, I, you

Adrian:

know, you do what your mom tells you or your, you know, your whole world

Adrian:

is, or is your home and your parents, and then maybe you branch out to listen

Adrian:

to your teachers to do your homework.

Adrian:

Or maybe you're listening to your friends in high school to, you know, be cool.

Adrian:

You wanna like be accepted and then you enter the workforce and

Adrian:

now you're listening to your boss.

Adrian:

And then maybe you finally find yourself in your twenties and you're

Adrian:

really rocking and rolling, but you're just trying to be cool with the world

Adrian:

and find your place in the world.

Adrian:

But what happens when you finally release yourself from all the, the,

Adrian:

the servitude of others, but you serve that higher purpose within you.

Adrian:

And then that's where I feel like I am now.

Adrian:

Like I'm, everything I'm doing is really aligned with.

Adrian:

what my true purpose, what my dharma, what my reason for being is.

Adrian:

And that's for the first time in my life really.

Kate:

Do you think that there was a process of going through a death of self

Kate:

of sorts, like your own death process to reach that space where you felt

Kate:

connected to your purpose, to your higher

Adrian:

self?

Adrian:

Yeah, because that old self identity was getting in the way of newness.

Adrian:

I had to let go of that, that ego identity, that the, the, the ego

Adrian:

death had to happen in order for, to leave room for new possibility.

Adrian:

And that was hard to, to, to let go and to fully not just let go,

Adrian:

but fully let that part of me die.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

You know, it's like one of those horror movies where the, the , the monster.

Adrian:

Keeps coming back, you know, one last time where it's just, is it quite dead?

Adrian:

No.

Adrian:

Like one class, one last shutter.

Adrian:

It would not die.

Adrian:

It was so well situated and just established in, in me, um, that

Adrian:

it kept rearing its ugly head.

Adrian:

And I was like, I don't know if this thing is really quite dead yet.

Adrian:

It took some practice to learn the new me.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Kate:

I, I love that, that it took practice.

Kate:

I think that's an important, like we have to practice.

Kate:

It's not something that happens in an instant, maybe it happens on a slower

Kate:

timeframe, and we have time for that to unfurl, for that, to unfold, for

Kate:

that to die, for that to be reborn.

Kate:

I have this, you know, listening to some of your interviews.

Kate:

You have this moment where you've, you've moved into this little trailer

Kate:

in Austin on a little piece of property and you're, I think you were chopping.

Kate:

Wood and hauling water.

Kate:

And

Adrian:

as the old proverb goes, I, I, I don't think it's Confucius, but it's

Adrian:

an old Chinese, uh, proverb, I guess chop wood carry water, meaning, I think,

Adrian:

I think what it is, is, um, the whole quote is something like, you know, when,

Adrian:

when times are tough, chop wood, carry water, when times are good, chop wood

Adrian:

carry water, you know, the idea is do be detached from how the world is and

Adrian:

just continue to keep your head down and

Kate:

do the work.

Kate:

Yeah, I love that.

Kate:

Um, as I'm a big fan of hard work and I think that that work where you're

Kate:

in that space that it's connecting you to, to nature is a really interesting

Kate:

space and I think one of my questions was like when you were in that space

Kate:

and you were connecting back to nature, stripping away all of the noise.

Kate:

what in that space does nature teach us about connection to ourselves and maybe

Kate:

to another, or teach us about love?

Kate:

Because I know that this dovetails into this beautiful love story

Kate:

that you have with your wife.

Adrian:

Hmm hmm.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

I, I grew up, I guess, in the post-modern era, you know, where we're very

Adrian:

self-conscious, very self-aware, media commercialization of, of images, and we've

Adrian:

become consumers to the point where we're consuming ourselves almost like ABOs, you

Adrian:

know, it's like the Snake Eden, its tale where we're projecting images and creating

Adrian:

content, and then we're selling each other ourselves, and then seeing ourselves

Adrian:

reflected like narcissus and being.

Adrian:

Consumed in that hall of mirrors and indulged in.

Adrian:

And as humans, we need re we need attention, right?

Adrian:

I mean, that's, if a baby gets no attention or if

Adrian:

it's not held, it will die.

Adrian:

So there's something about our makeup, the way we are as, um, beans

Adrian:

that needs to be acknowledged, needs the awareness of the other, and

Adrian:

on, on some level that's healthy.

Adrian:

It's a healthy ego, right?

Adrian:

And it's a healthy awareness of self.

Adrian:

But right now, and like our culture, we're so hyper aware of everything and

Adrian:

we see ourselves reflected so many times because everybody's trying to sell us

Adrian:

something or, or get our attention, or we're trying to get other people's

Adrian:

attention that it becomes, I think, uh, on some level, unhealthy and dysfunctional.

Adrian:

The thing about nature, It doesn't have an agenda to sell you anything.

Adrian:

It's not looking for you for your approval.

Adrian:

It's not trying to get you to do anything.

Adrian:

There's no, it, it's like even a sign, it has a, it's, it's addressing you, right?

Adrian:

Like a, a sign that says stop or go, or th that away.

Adrian:

You know, the, it's telling you something and has a face aside that is looking

Adrian:

at you and telling you something.

Adrian:

And even that very subtle piece of media of, of, that's content, right?

Adrian:

That's even that, even though it's a sign, it's supposed to be informational,

Adrian:

it's still gives you the impression that it's telling you something.

Adrian:

So on sub some subtle subconscious level, you feel addressed.

Adrian:

But when you go out in nature, There's no tree that's asking anything of you,

Adrian:

that's not addressing you in particular.

Adrian:

There's nature is, is just this balance of forces, and you are, you

Adrian:

are placed within it without that self-conscious, without that attention.

Adrian:

And it's a humbling experience in which you are now part of everything.

Adrian:

You, you know, it's, you're now on equal footing with the universe.

Adrian:

And that can be overwhelming because it's, yeah, it's an infinite

Adrian:

It's infinite, right?

Adrian:

Look up in the sky and you're just like, whoa.

Adrian:

You know, it's, it goes on and on and on.

Adrian:

So it feels a little bit isolated and scary and dis dis.

Adrian:

It's, it's sometimes dis disjointed, disconcert.

Adrian:

. And so part of letting go of my ego identity and coming down to earth was

Adrian:

very much getting comfortable with that.

Adrian:

The abyss, the infinite, you know, uh, unfolding of time

Adrian:

and space that wasn't about me.

Adrian:

That where, where I wasn't the center, it wasn't an egocentric experience,

Adrian:

it was more egocentric in which I was now placed in my proper place,

Adrian:

which was not in my own narcissism and self-awareness, but was in now

Adrian:

connection with something much bigger.

Kate:

I have this, I didn't know if I was gonna pull this quote, but I've been

Kate:

reading this book, um, by Andreas Weber called Matter and Desire and Erotic

Kate:

Ecology, and it's very much about . Why am I not reading that ? I don't know.

Kate:

You need to be reading this book.

Kate:

Um, it's very much about our place in that ecocentric, that we are just one thread

Kate:

in this giant weaving of the universe.

Kate:

And I think that that experience with nature, and I mean just, just from

Kate:

what I know of what I've experienced, I'll just read this to you and,

Kate:

and we'll see what shakes out.

Kate:

So this is his third law of.

Kate:

The third love desire, however, holds the opposite.

Kate:

It emphasizes that we must be close to other living beings in order to grasp

Kate:

certain depths of our own nature, certain ways of our transforming power, and our

Kate:

deeply imaginative and creative character.

Kate:

The third love desire states only in the mirror of other life.

Kate:

Can we understand our own lives.

Kate:

Only in the eyes of the other can we become ourselves.

Kate:

We need the real presence of the most unknown.

Kate:

The owls mute regard, the silent nudes gaze.

Kate:

Only it can unlock the depths in ourselves that otherwise would be sealed forever.

Kate:

We need the experience of an inside unfolding in front of us,

Kate:

displaying itself as a fragile body.

Kate:

We need other organisms because they are what we are, but with this cunning

Kate:

twist, they are that hidden part of us, which we cannot see because we exist

Kate:

through this part and we see with it.

Kate:

Viewed in this light.

Kate:

Other beings are the blind spot of our self-understanding.

Kate:

It's invisible center, which is the source of all vision.

Adrian:

You definitely have to send that to me.

Adrian:

That that deserves probably a reread . That was a, that was beautiful.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

What does that, what does that say to you?

Adrian:

What does that mean to you?

Kate:

I think that there's this experience that we've had, right?

Kate:

We're so disconnected.

Kate:

And you know, one of the things I heard you say at one point is that

Kate:

one of your goals with, with life and one of your philosophies is

Kate:

increasing sensation and connection.

Kate:

And this really resonated with me because I think that we are feeling bodies and

Kate:

at this point of Decart and Newton, when we sort of embrace this sort of linear

Kate:

way of thinking, when we get out of the cycles of the earth, when we come home

Kate:

to that and we come home to our cyclical nature, to our place within nature, that

Kate:

single thread that is one thread, uh, one infinite thread folded over many times,

Kate:

I think that we get to see these parts of ourselves that we have disconnected from.

Kate:

in what it means to carry water or to chop wood, or to put soil

Kate:

in your hands or to plant a tree.

Adrian:

Hmm.

Adrian:

Yeah, no, that's, that resonates.

Adrian:

Hmm.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

I'm just sort of sitting with that.

Adrian:

I, I don't know how much we as individuals can feel Hmm.

Adrian:

How much we can, how, how ex, how much expansiveness we can actually

Adrian:

hold within our physical limitations.

Adrian:

There's something we're talking about death or, I mean, I think death is

Adrian:

probably a theme of this podcast, right?

Adrian:

Or in your life at least oftentimes.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Often.

Adrian:

Often, yeah.

Adrian:

Often comes back to death.

Adrian:

. Yeah.

Adrian:

All of us.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

So there's as, as much as we might fear death, there's

Adrian:

something that feels inviting.

Adrian:

And comforting about non-existence, ah, the, the, the sweet relief of not

Adrian:

having to feel and do anything and you're just, just peace, nothingness,

Adrian:

of course, per chance to dream, right.

Adrian:

We don't know if it was so comforting.

Adrian:

Maybe that'd be one thing, but maybe it's not.

Adrian:

Maybe it's, you know, worse than, than, than we can imagine.

Adrian:

But I do feel like there's something about not wanting to have to feel that I crave.

Adrian:

And that's why we escaped in drugs, alcohol, or any other number of things

Adrian:

to numb and to make us stop feeling.

Adrian:

And I did that for most of my life.

Adrian:

There was some traumas that I had as a kid that at a certain point I

Adrian:

decided that I didn't wanna feel, I didn't want anything to do.

Adrian:

Is that, so I devised.

Adrian:

ways in order to design a life that would keep me from having to feel those things.

Adrian:

And I constructed a whole, I mean, throughout my day I was finding little

Adrian:

ways to escape or to numb or to not think.

Adrian:

And, and sure I didn't feel the things that were painful, but also I wasn't,

Adrian:

I, I was not completely present.

Adrian:

I wasn't here.

Adrian:

So I think part of our opportunity and our burden is to be present, to be here now,

Adrian:

and to feel what it's like to be alive.

Adrian:

And that means to expand into more feeling as scary as and

Adrian:

uncomfortable as that might be.

Adrian:

And I guess in theory, If we can increase feeling and sensation to the outer

Adrian:

reaches of our bodily experience, our human experience, uh, we might be able to

Adrian:

see and perceive the world and interpret the world more accurately, cuz you have

Adrian:

more data points, more information.

Adrian:

And maybe some of that information isn't intellectual, maybe it's

Adrian:

not even through the five senses, but it can be intuitive as well.

Adrian:

Like what are, what are the sensations that come up that

Adrian:

aren't even being stimulated by anything in the physical world?

Adrian:

Are, are there other subterranean levels of awareness that can

Adrian:

be unearthed and unlocked?

Adrian:

And as I pursue my spiritual expansion and awakening, I say,

Adrian:

yeah, there is for too long I was.

Adrian:

Corralled into, and I was limited by my five senses, particularly the,

Adrian:

the five senses below the waist.

Adrian:

was one big, the one big sense that, you know, tends to, you know, be distracting.

Adrian:

I was, I was all in my head intellectual so smug with all my fancy thinking

Adrian:

and such, and rhetoric just limited.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Like a, in a box really of I was head and cock.

Adrian:

I mean, that's really, that's what it is.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

But I had no heart.

Adrian:

I didn't, I wasn't feeling in my heart cuz it was too painful.

Adrian:

I had no gut, I, I, I wasn't able to sense what was, you know, the world

Adrian:

around me except in how I interpreted and projected my own thinking onto it

Adrian:

or something was carnal and, and felt.

Adrian:

Pleasurable desire and was just motivating me that wasn't even in charge of that.

Adrian:

So my journey as of late has been, okay, if I am an an, an, an antenna , if

Adrian:

I am an antenna and I am receiving information from the universe, from

Adrian:

the world, how can I polish that up?

Adrian:

How can I tune my frequency to pick up the, the important stuff in the world?

Adrian:

Not just the noise, but you can create, you know, find

Adrian:

the signal within the noise.

Adrian:

So yeah, increase sensation so that I can fine tune my instrument, which is.

Adrian:

, you know, we're, we're, we're sticking up for a reason.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

We're like an antenna.

Kate:

How have you gone about increasing sensation?

Kate:

Because I love this and I also love, you touched on something I heard you

Kate:

say in another podcast, that feeling is truth, the most real thing you

Kate:

can experience, and you were talking about it in reference to allowing

Kate:

yourself a greater intuition or finding that in, in connection in sensation.

Kate:

And so how are you

Adrian:

fine-tuning this?

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

For a long time I was, if, if I, you know, you, the, the whole, you have

Adrian:

to see it to believe it mentality.

Adrian:

Well, if I don't see it, this, you know, I can't vouch for it.

Adrian:

Or if, if it hasn't gone through scientific rigor and scrutiny

Adrian:

and it hasn't been proved out through experimentation, or if some

Adrian:

authority hasn't told me that it's the case, then I can't believe it.

Adrian:

I had no religion, I had no faith.

Adrian:

I had no, um, sense of the intangible.

Adrian:

It had to be here.

Adrian:

Now I had to know it to believe it.

Adrian:

And that's, that's a trap, right?

Adrian:

Because there's so much that is true, that is beyond language, beyond words.

Adrian:

And I think we as a culture are stuck in this, in this heady headiness, we've

Adrian:

forgetting how to feel and connect into the truth, which is beyond the flesh.

Adrian:

So I have been really just before, like I had to really take, make the effort

Adrian:

to take the time to get outta my head and into my heart and, and drop into my.

Adrian:

, you know, a deeper awareness.

Adrian:

But these days I feel like I'm, now that I'm a lot more developed in

Adrian:

my familiarity with those parts of me, I don't have to work as hard.

Adrian:

I, my intuition is online now.

Adrian:

And, and you know, there, there was, and I don't know if this is

Adrian:

just a corny mean, maybe it is.

Adrian:

I think, I think I saw this in what the bleep do, do we know, you

Kate:

know?

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

You see that?

Kate:

Oh man, I haven't thought about that movie in a

Adrian:

while.

Adrian:

But yeah, I don't know why it just came to my mind.

Adrian:

But they were talking about how some indigenous peoples had never seen ships.

Adrian:

Like the way when, so when the, when settlers came, when the, the

Adrian:

colonizers came, they were coming from the ocean on ships, these big ships,

Adrian:

and they'd never s the indigenous people hadn't seen ships like that.

Adrian:

So they didn't have a reference point.

Adrian:

So when they witnessed them with their eyes, they c they

Adrian:

didn't actually see them.

Adrian:

They couldn't see them Until you have, until you're able to reference it.

Adrian:

Some, just think about all the things that you are right in front of you

Adrian:

that you, that you can't even Yes.

Adrian:

Make sense of you.

Adrian:

You, you're not witnessing, you're not seeing, you're not, because

Adrian:

it doesn't, you, it doesn't have any context in your, yeah.

Adrian:

In your life.

Adrian:

So all the things that were around me that I was not aware of because that

Adrian:

part of me was offline and now the whole world has opened up where I can sense

Adrian:

things, I can feel things I, I can relate to my wife in a, on a deeper level.

Adrian:

I can understand her in ways that she, for so long was.

Adrian:

Screaming to get me to understand and I just couldn't get it.

Adrian:

I didn't get it.

Adrian:

It's, it's the difference between rolling around like an ameba, like a toddler

Adrian:

and standing up and clumsily walking through life as a, as a, you know, baby.

Adrian:

And then finally standing and being able to, to move, move about the cabin.

Adrian:

There's a difference.

Adrian:

I, I, I meet people and I, and whereas before I'd say, oh, what a nice guy.

Adrian:

And now I say, oh, there's something off about this guy.

Adrian:

And I'm feeling the conversation That is psychic.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

You know, people come into a room and they bring their energy, their traumas,

Adrian:

whatever, and they're just like smearing it all over the place and be, whereas

Adrian:

before I, I just wanted their approval cause I just wanted to be liked,

Adrian:

so I didn't really even take note.

Adrian:

But now I'm like, Ooh, yeah, that guy's probably not gonna

Adrian:

be right for me in my life.

Adrian:

He's probably gonna be a wrong turn.

Adrian:

I'm able to be more discerning, make better judgements.

Adrian:

I can be more honest with myself.

Adrian:

I can see the world more accurately because I have more

Adrian:

data points, more information.

Adrian:

Yeah, that's, that's in increase in sensation.

Adrian:

It's increasing awareness.

Kate:

I love that.

Kate:

I think it's so important and a life that we often numb from.

Kate:

You had a great quote, and I don't remember where I heard it, but you said

Kate:

that the betterment of society starts with the transformation of the individual.

Kate:

And I think in many ways we've been talking about that so far, but I think

Kate:

that one of the things I find interesting is when we have these transformative

Kate:

experiences and then we seek out this connection to nature and we see the

Kate:

transformative power of nature through regeneration and maybe tap into this space

Kate:

of regenerative agriculture, and we find ourselves in this cycle of transformation

Kate:

that as stewards of the land or, uh, I've heard you call it an apprentice of

Kate:

the land, which I really love, that all of a sudden we're opening ourselves up

Kate:

to cha up and open for change as we're.

Kate:

Working with regenerating land.

Kate:

And so I wanna, I wanna get to Kintsugi Ranch, which I haven't

Kate:

heard you talk about as much on podcasts and about slowing down to

Kate:

the cadence of earth with earth speed.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

You wanna just talk about it generally?

Kate:

I wanna talk about, I mean, first I think, I'd love to know what that moment

Kate:

was that you realized that you wanted to be in nature and working with it.

Kate:

Mm-hmm.

Kate:

To be an apprentice of the land.

Kate:

Why don't we start there?

Kate:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

So I guess I haven't talked about consi as much because I'm trying to find that

Adrian:

the right balance between being in the public eye and continuing to lean in and

Adrian:

step into the public and keeping things a little bit more sacred and private.

Adrian:

Before I was just, you know, I was out there and I just sort of, I was famous

Adrian:

and I just sort of embraced that and just went all the way full, full hog.

Adrian:

And now I'm really wanting to have sacred privacy and have and

Adrian:

protect my family from the pitfalls of attention and, and fame.

Adrian:

So I created earth speed as a way to communicate to the outside world.

Adrian:

Whereas Kintsugi, which is our ranch and our home, it's, it's

Adrian:

a little bit more private.

Adrian:

Although they, they definitely, I mean, it's, it's hard to, to make a distinction

Adrian:

cuz they're, they're ov, they overlap a absolutely, if not one and the same.

Adrian:

But Kintsugi Ranch is, is our home in Kintsugi.

Adrian:

is a perfect title.

Adrian:

Title, A perfect name for , um, filmmaker and me.

Adrian:

It is a perfect name for the the ranch cuz Kintsugi is the Japanese practice

Adrian:

of mending broken pottery with gold.

Adrian:

And that is a, a recognition that that which is broken can be made whole

Adrian:

again and more beautiful by recognizing and honoring and revered the cracks.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And bonding it bo bonding it back with gold highlights the cracks.

Adrian:

So it actually is a story of anti-fragility and, and resilience

Adrian:

and I think it's a beautiful story.

Adrian:

Not only.

Adrian:

A piece of pottery, to live again, a new life, but also for us as humans,

Adrian:

to look at the parts of us that are broken and instead of spiraling into

Adrian:

shame or regret or feeling inadequate, really looking at that as being part

Adrian:

of what makes us uniquely beautiful and, and can make us stronger.

Adrian:

It, there are very few things in the world that are anti-fragile and in humans'

Adrian:

nature, we are anti-fragile because the more you throw at us, the stronger we get.

Adrian:

Our, our muscles grow.

Adrian:

When they tear, they tear repair, and they get bigger and stronger.

Adrian:

So Kintsugi is the story of, of that, and of, of us as individuals,

Adrian:

spiritually also a story of the land, how we can bring practices of

Adrian:

regeneration and healing the planet.

Adrian:

From the brokenness that it has endured at the hands of human beings.

Adrian:

In many ways, we're repairing this land, making it whole again, healing some

Adrian:

of the negative monocropping practices in the, the chemical fertilizers and

Adrian:

pesticides that were here at one point, healing and Kintsugi in the soil.

Adrian:

And then also my, my wife and I are a story of rebirth in that we,

Adrian:

we were together for many years.

Adrian:

We broke up, we spent two years apart, and then we, we got a, we,

Adrian:

we got back together and, and so we are a story of Kintsugi as well.

Adrian:

So that's a, it's just a, it's a sort of a perfect, perfect metaphor.

Adrian:

Perfect word.

Adrian:

Represents us.

Kate:

It's a really beautiful metaphor, and I think it's a, it's

Kate:

a really beautiful personal space, and we can leave that in the sacred.

Kate:

I, I deeply understand that.

Kate:

And transition into earth speed and yeah, this idea of living

Kate:

at the cadence of earth, which I love because it's slow, right?

Kate:

It's not, maybe it's not as fast as we're used to going.

Kate:

And the cadence of a river as it carves a canyon over time is not

Kate:

going to be what we think of as time in our, in our human meet suits.

Kate:

But I would love to hear you talk about this a little bit, because I think

Kate:

that this is, this is really beautiful.

Adrian:

Yeah, thank you.

Adrian:

It's, um, it's, it can be slow.

Adrian:

It, it invites you to be slow, but it, it also, it can be fast too.

Adrian:

The earth doesn't rush and yet everything gets done.

Adrian:

Hmm.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

And whereas humans, we always got, like, we had the time pressure, right.

Adrian:

That, that the death, the oncoming death.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

So we had to do it all quickly.

Adrian:

So yeah, when I got into the cadence of nature, I realized that I didn't have

Adrian:

to, uh, move faster than evolution, you know, faster than your capacity to evolve.

Adrian:

Sometimes you, you know, a lot of, a lot of times I see people out there,

Adrian:

especially in social media, people jump into the fire before they're

Adrian:

ready because they feel like they have to, you know, make a change or do

Adrian:

something big or drastic in order to be relevant or to, for their lives to have.

Adrian:

and, and, and they haven't taken that time to learn to work under a master,

Adrian:

to be an apprentice, to fully mature, to go through the rights of passage,

Adrian:

PA passages where they can become, come into themselves before they start

Adrian:

trying to tell the world how to be

Adrian:

. Kate: You said once that to mature you

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

and I think that so much of coming into first generation

Adrian:

farming and, and life honestly, is

Adrian:

that Yeah.

Adrian:

It's first gen.

Adrian:

Are you a first generation farmer?

Adrian:

Yeah, I am.

Adrian:

Oh, respect

Adrian:

. Kate: Yeah.

Adrian:

I mean, it's salty.

Adrian:

You're, they,

Adrian:

you're out there.

Adrian:

I thought you're a professional.

Adrian:

You, you're a professional In my eyes, I dunno.

Kate:

I'm a professional butcher.

Kate:

Uh oh, okay.

Kate:

But I am not a professional farmer.

Kate:

I am a, I'm a first generation farmer and I am trying to

Kate:

figure it out as I go along.

Kate:

But I think that those, that invitation to, to not rush and to not rush to know

Kate:

and understand everything and to fail and to tottle and kind of flop around and

Kate:

not knowing exactly what to do is, it's a transformative space and it gives you this

Kate:

relationship with the land and this, this feedback cycle that you become a part of.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

. Yeah.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

I feel, um, yeah, I mean, just going back to that learner's mind.

Adrian:

, right?

Adrian:

That beginner's mind, I think that's what it's called, right?

Adrian:

The beginner's mind where you, you know, you don't have like that arrogance of

Adrian:

certainty where you're just making carbon copies of the thing, you know, as opposed

Adrian:

to being creatively inventive and present for what is so that you can be, respond

Adrian:

responsive to the world as it unfolds.

Adrian:

And that's part, that's part of also the anti-fragile story.

Adrian:

You know, if you're not, if you're not able to bend with and move

Adrian:

with what is, then you know, you, you run the risk of breaking.

Adrian:

So every day, I, I go out on the land and I try and not bring what I knew

Adrian:

yesterday to the moment, but just witness and observe permaculture lesson

Adrian:

number one, observe and interact.

Adrian:

And that I, I don't think that ever ends.

Adrian:

That's the first principle, because first you have to be in flow with what is, and

Adrian:

you have to observe the world as it is, instead of it being what you want it to

Adrian:

be, imposing your will upon the moment.

Adrian:

And that's what modern cities are, right?

Adrian:

You just, even the development next door that just come and clear, uh,

Adrian:

clear out a bunch of old growth forest to, to pour concrete and put a shopping

Adrian:

mall or something, you know, as opposed to saying, what is this land here?

Adrian:

What is this space asking for?

Adrian:

You know, how's the water flowing?

Adrian:

You know, what, what trees are important to this ecosystem?

Adrian:

What's important to preserve?

Adrian:

But that would take, that takes longer, right?

Adrian:

That takes patience.

Adrian:

And our modern industry doesn't have the patience, doesn't want to work at the

Adrian:

cadence of nature, wants to work at the cadence of ego and, you know, timelines

Adrian:

and quarters and years and board meetings.

Adrian:

And that's understandable.

Adrian:

I get that.

Adrian:

But is there a way that we can both be humans that are progressing forward?

Adrian:

Because I think that's in our nature to, to build and create and create systems

Adrian:

that are reliable and that, that uncouple us from nature to, to en enough that we

Adrian:

can store food, you know, over multiple seasons so that we're not always at the,

Adrian:

uh, mercy of the, the, the weather or the temperature or the crops that year.

Adrian:

That's, that's our genius is that we can adapt and.

Adrian:

and become more, we can overcome limitations, but at the same time,

Adrian:

can we go back to be in that rhythm?

Adrian:

Not, not, you know, go back, maybe not go back, but remember that we are part of

Adrian:

that rhythm and the cycles and if we can plant in the moon cycles , if we learn

Adrian:

that one day we might actually benefit because there are, there's technology

Adrian:

that is non-human that has been developed over millions of years in nature.

Adrian:

There's a design wisdom within nature that we, that would benefit us if we

Adrian:

were to work with within, uh, and to paint using the palette that nature has

Adrian:

created, would, I think, in theory, I, because I'm still a novice, I don't know,

Adrian:

it's just an idea, , but would allow us to not only have everything that we, all

Adrian:

the luxuries that we've grown accustomed to, but also do it so that we're,

Adrian:

it's not at the expense of the earth.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And so it's not extractive.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

, but it's additive.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

, because nature is additive.

Adrian:

Nature by design produces no waste.

Adrian:

It just is, it's just re regenerated.

Adrian:

It's, um, recycling, composted, recycled.

Kate:

In a literal way.

Kate:

Like there, it, it is that recycling in the same way that you mentioned

Kate:

the boroughs before, right?

Kate:

That it is just constantly reentering cycle after cycle and

Kate:

utilizing every, every piece, every mineral, every microorganism

Kate:

inside of the soil to become again.

Kate:

And I think that's, it's been a gift transformed for me.

Kate:

Transformed.

Kate:

Yeah.

Kate:

And it's been such a gift for me to see that and to witness that possibility

Kate:

within myself from moment to moment and to then interact with that transformation

Kate:

at the level of going outside every day and becoming the observer, which

Kate:

naturally I think pulls you out of that.

Kate:

egocentric space.

Kate:

You can't be an observer and not be, it gets you out of your head.

Kate:

It gets you into a sense of being part of a place.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

. Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

. Yes.

Adrian:

And, and, and, and saying that, I think that's such an important

Adrian:

benefit, is feeling at home.

Adrian:

Feeling that you have place in the world, being human can be so lonely,

Adrian:

and when you take the time to get into connection with nature, you

Adrian:

realize that it's quite comforting, you know, that you are important,

Adrian:

that you do have a role to play.

Adrian:

There's so much mental illness and, and, and just human.

Adrian:

Tragedy because people feel isolated and, and, and unseen

Adrian:

and like they don't belong.

Adrian:

There's so much shame and, um, an anti humanness.

Adrian:

Right?

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Especially in environmentalism, you know, uh, ironically under the guise

Adrian:

of helped the planet, it's l you know, let's, let's, let's, uh, de depress human

Adrian:

beings, you know, and make them smaller.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Kate:

Make them a blight on the earth too, which naturally builds that wall

Kate:

of separation again, between us and nature, between us and our environment.

Kate:

Not a part of it.

Kate:

Right.

Kate:

You're, you're

Adrian:

the problem.

Adrian:

You're the problem.

Adrian:

You shouldn't be here.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Your existence is actually a, a bad thing.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And that does a lot of, I mean, just think about what, you know, what a kid.

Adrian:

Here's what, what they must go through if you were to say

Adrian:

that out loud to them, right?

Adrian:

You are nothing.

Adrian:

You're terrible.

Adrian:

I wish you were never born, right?

Adrian:

. And then you hear that echoed through environmentalism, that humans are bad

Adrian:

and you know, you, you shouldn't be here.

Adrian:

And you're, it's, it's because of you that the world is ending and

Adrian:

that being, you know, destroyed.

Adrian:

Whereas imagine the creative support that humans can be if they feel connected to

Adrian:

the earth, if they feel like they belong, if they feel like they have purpose.

Adrian:

We're just driving people into depression and into nihilism.

Adrian:

And they want to escape and numb and they want to not feel

Adrian:

anymore and they want to die.

Adrian:

They want to not be here cuz they feel like everything is for not, they

Adrian:

feel like the world is gonna end.

Adrian:

And, and so they, they give up.

Adrian:

. But if you connect with nature, if you, if you find your place at home in the earth,

Adrian:

from the earth as part of earth, that's a to, there's a totally different message.

Adrian:

The message is you are safe, you are home.

Adrian:

You do have a reason for being here, and you're not, you're

Kate:

not alone.

Kate:

I wanna bring into that the idea of community.

Kate:

One of the things I found in watching some of your Earth speed videos and kind

Kate:

of exploring is this idea of community above ground is also as important as

Kate:

the ways in which we build microbial and soil, food, web communities.

Kate:

Below ground and that there was a video and it talked about this idea that

Kate:

we're pushing self-care when what we need is community care and to bring

Kate:

in spaces where we can be together.

Kate:

And I think so much of what I just heard you say is in this isolation,

Kate:

we are disconnected not just from nature but also from from other humans.

Kate:

And you're doing some work to build community in Texas, which is amazing.

Kate:

And I think that, that a lot of us that have kind of returned to this

Kate:

lifestyle, have created these little hubs where we're trying to build community

Kate:

outwards, recognizing that the nature of human is in collaboration, not

Kate:

just with Earth, but with each other.

Adrian:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Adrian:

We.

Adrian:

. Yeah.

Adrian:

I , I, I sort of have been loosely trying to develop this concept.

Adrian:

Uh, it's, uh, like, uh, oscillation therapy because we have the

Adrian:

capacity to, well, the world, the universe, everything is infinite.

Adrian:

It's infinitely big and it's infinitely small.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

and every, and, and, and there's a dynamic between the polar.

Adrian:

There's a polar dynamic.

Adrian:

Energetically, everything's waves.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

The high point of the wave and the low point of the valley of the wave.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And where am I going with this?

Adrian:

So we are alone, we are individuals, but we're also part of a community.

Kate:

Yep.

Kate:

We are paradoxes.

Kate:

Right.

Kate:

Light.

Kate:

We are light is both a wave and a particle.

Kate:

Yes.

Kate:

And so our human existence is also paradoxical.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

So I, I feel like the wave of evolution and.

Adrian:

Human development is oscillating between self and community.

Adrian:

Hmm.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

So you're individual.

Adrian:

I'm me and I don't, you know, I can like go out on my own and go carve my

Adrian:

own path and push forward ideas that are maybe a little bit strange or odd

Adrian:

and they haven't been accepted yet.

Adrian:

And I can innovate.

Adrian:

I'm an entrepreneur, right?

Adrian:

I'm a creative force, but then I also wanna be accepted and

Adrian:

and honored by the community.

Adrian:

I don't wanna be so weird or so different that I, that I lose, I lose my cool Right.

Adrian:

. Um, so I feel like we're in a place in human development where I think

Adrian:

in all, all society, I think we on individuals go through those

Adrian:

periods of individual individuation and then also where we wanna be.

Adrian:

Accepted and close to community, one undeveloped community.

Adrian:

And we as, as like a collective humanity, like society.

Adrian:

We go through egocentric and then like communal centric periods.

Adrian:

I feel like, I think we're craving community, right?

Adrian:

We've gone through this hyper, you know, narcissistic time where everybody's

Adrian:

a on needs to be an entrepreneur.

Adrian:

Everybody needs to be Elon Musk and, you know, scale a business or

Adrian:

you know, get all of the attention on TikTok, be a influencer, be,

Adrian:

you know, insta-famous, whatever.

Adrian:

I think society is craving what it's like to be in community.

Adrian:

There's, there's a lot of.

Adrian:

Sicknesses of isolation.

Adrian:

And we need to re, we need to figure out how to treat our, the elderly better.

Adrian:

Yes.

Adrian:

Instead of pushing them off into homes where they're more likely

Adrian:

to die alone, how do we bring them in and embrace their wisdom?

Adrian:

And, you know, recog let them and recognize how important their wisdom is

Adrian:

to our growth and our learning as young, as younger people, but also how it, um,

Adrian:

gives them a sense of continued purpose.

Adrian:

People without purpose, they die.

Adrian:

Right.

Adrian:

And so I think we're, we're a little bit out of balance, or maybe we're

Adrian:

going through another period of now coming back to community and um, and

Adrian:

that is also part of our return home to nature and coming back to the

Adrian:

community of the microbes and the.

Adrian:

Animals and bacteria and even the wind.

Adrian:

The wind is uh, uh, part of our community.

Adrian:

All the things.

Kate:

You touched on something I really love, which is this idea that I, I like

Kate:

that you called it oscillation therapy.

Kate:

I'm, I'm a little curious how that would play out, but.

Kate:

The universe expands and contracts, right?

Kate:

And we see these cycles of culture where, where one generation kind of

Kate:

pushes off the other, or one overarching narrative or idea kind of pushes you.

Kate:

You get this highly individuated society and the counter to that is

Kate:

going to be coming back into community.

Kate:

And I think the, the key to that, and what I'm curious, sometimes how we cultivate

Kate:

is, is a sense of balance of not letting the pendulum swing all the way over here,

Kate:

but to come to this place of balance.

Kate:

And I think that within the idea of that wave function where you're getting

Kate:

these oscillations, if you can kind of decrease the amplitude or, or increase

Kate:

the frequency, you're getting some of that balance within, within our

Kate:

human spaces, on our human timelines.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And I wonder if this idea of balance is even achievable.

Adrian:

Yes.

Adrian:

Or if yes, or if balance is simply that detached awareness, that spiritual

Adrian:

observer that is within us, that is just, you know, just taking note, just watching.

Adrian:

So that's, I guess, the idea of oscillation therapy is to be mindfully

Adrian:

engaged with recognizing that we are both, and to know where you are, where

Adrian:

you're operating from in that moment.

Adrian:

Are you thinking of all the world's problems and how great and big,

Adrian:

like, and complex all of society is, and how the environment is, you

Adrian:

know, being destroyed in so many different ways that it's overwhelming.

Adrian:

and that you just, you start to break down.

Adrian:

Or are you so myopic and self-absorbed that you're, you've, you're not

Adrian:

even participating in, in life or society and you're, you know,

Adrian:

just simply consuming blindly, you know, or So which one are you in?

Adrian:

And can you, can you observe a, uh, can you see the world at large a all the

Adrian:

troubles and wars and, and recognize that without staying stuck there, and

Adrian:

come back to the present small moment and then act and then take action.

Adrian:

So I was thinking about, so when I was doing ocean work, I was

Adrian:

looking at the plastic problem.

Adrian:

10 million tons is estimated to make its way into the ocean

Adrian:

every year, 10 million tons.

Adrian:

So how big is that?

Adrian:

Un unfathomable, right?

Adrian:

Like, how do you even begin to tackle that?

Adrian:

It's too big.

Adrian:

It's too big.

Adrian:

. So what happens?

Adrian:

People just shut down.

Adrian:

Either they get so riled up, like the world is messed up and that's like,

Adrian:

you know, messed like, I don't know.

Adrian:

They just try and be as big as that problem and they fail cause

Adrian:

they're just like one human, right?

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

, they may have a big me megaphone, but they'll never be as big or as

Adrian:

loud as that mass amount of plastic.

Adrian:

So how do we recognize that big challenge, but come down to earth and

Adrian:

find something small and actionable?

Adrian:

So that's when I created, for better, for worse.

Adrian:

It's, it's controversial on some level, but I started the plastic straw movement.

Adrian:

So I was like, well, I did not realize that.

Adrian:

Yeah, , well people had, you know, talked about straws, but Sure.

Adrian:

I sort of popularized it.

Adrian:

So I, uh, I created Stop sucking, which was the, so, so the whole

Adrian:

idea was to, to break down that big problem into a single unit of measure.

Adrian:

One, one unit of plastic in the ocean.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And so I was like, oh, the straw is like a perfect representation of that.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Cause it's small, it's mic, it's practically microplastic.

Adrian:

And it, it, it's like something that we can all take action on.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

So instead of worrying about the 10 million tons, just

Adrian:

worry about the plastic straw.

Adrian:

And if you can do that every day, you know, however many times a day

Adrian:

that people wanna give you a straw, then maybe, maybe you can start to

Adrian:

chip away at this bigger problem.

Kate:

I love the philosophy behind that, because I think that one thing that I've

Kate:

noticed, and then having conversations on the podcast, it comes up a lot, is that

Kate:

oftentimes these problems feel so big, so insurmountable that we don't even try.

Kate:

Right.

Kate:

And there is this component of like, well, let.

Kate:

Let's just try a couple of different things, even if it's

Kate:

on a really small scale and just begin to see what's possible.

Kate:

And so I think, I think that really opens up the door for that aspect

Kate:

of let's just, let's try some stuff.

Kate:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And, and you can, I think you can apply oscillation therapy to,

Adrian:

you know, all aspects of your life.

Adrian:

You know, like what, what, what?

Adrian:

And, and we're so thrust into because of media, the big problems of the world.

Adrian:

Yes.

Adrian:

Right?

Adrian:

And everything seems so present and we have to, we somehow have

Adrian:

to solve all the world's problems.

Adrian:

All of a sudden we have to take the weight of the world on your shoulders.

Adrian:

No, no one person can do that.

Adrian:

And we all have, we're also ego, uh, focused that we think we're the

Adrian:

ones that have to save the world as individuals like you, yourself are

Adrian:

the one that's gonna save the world.

Adrian:

Like, like, Not you, we like we together, right?

Adrian:

So how do you work in harmony with others?

Adrian:

How do you get out of your, your own feels so that you can, so you can get

Adrian:

out of bed in the morning and activate, and then how do you do it with others?

Adrian:

How do you come together with community in, in harmony and, yeah.

Adrian:

So anyway,

Adrian:

, . Kate: No, I think that's the perfect

Adrian:

I think that's the perfect place to kind of begin to wind things down,

Adrian:

because I think that taking it out of the individual and, and putting us back

Adrian:

into nature and back into community is so much a part of a recipe for something.

Adrian:

I'm not sure what it is, but it, it feels, it feels important,

Adrian:

it feels salient back into wholeness, back into Kintsugi.

Adrian:

You know, we're fragmented as a society and I think we

Adrian:

can come back into cohesion.

Adrian:

We're not at, I mean, I think in many ways, The divide between us politically

Adrian:

and socially is largely a projection and manufactured, but it's not real, you know?

Adrian:

And so we can actually start to come back together if we have the courage

Adrian:

to get out of ourselves and recognize that we, we do need each other.

Adrian:

We need to be seen, we need to s to to witness each other

Adrian:

and extend, extend ourselves.

Adrian:

I, I was, I was a New York City liberal, totally arrogant, and you know, I,

Adrian:

I, I mean literally coast to coast, flying from one side to the other.

Adrian:

over the flyover states, by the way, Texas, where I live now, being one of

Adrian:

the places that I wouldn't touch with a 10 foot pole , because everybody

Adrian:

there was so backwards and how could they vote that way in all the things?

Adrian:

And it was, it was actually the, the election of Donald Trump that

Adrian:

I, that freaked me out so much.

Adrian:

I was like, how could the, the, those people vote for someone like that

Adrian:

because he's this and that and the other?

Adrian:

And I was so stuck in my own perspective and what I believed that I realized,

Adrian:

I, I, I decided I was gonna start to reach out and understand those

Adrian:

people, quote unquote those people, so that I could make them change.

Adrian:

So that I could save them.

Adrian:

And the more I reached out and the more I really truly started

Adrian:

to understand, their perspective.

Adrian:

I started to realize there was a part of the hole that I was missing.

Adrian:

There was something that I hadn't been seen.

Adrian:

And, and ironically, , I was the one who changed . They

Adrian:

were the one who changed me.

Adrian:

And thankfully cuz I got to expand outside of my egocentric myopic liberal bubble

Adrian:

into more wholeness and found so many great humans that are now, um, mentors

Adrian:

and teachers and surrogate grandparents.

Adrian:

So, ha, happy to ha, happy to have landed in one of the flyover states.

Adrian:

. Kate: Yeah.

Adrian:

There's something to be said for.

Adrian:

I love what you said it, because politics is, I think in many ways

Adrian:

there's, there's aspects of illusion to this and it's not real per se.

Adrian:

And I think that when we live in the very tangible world, this feedback of nature,

Adrian:

it somehow lessens that grip on us.

Adrian:

And I always think that we come to know ourselves more when we seek

Adrian:

out people that we feel are other.

Adrian:

When we seek out those people, those other people mm-hmm.

Adrian:

. Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

that aren't us.

Adrian:

Mm-hmm.

Adrian:

, that is when we meet the parts of ourselves that we least expected,

Adrian:

or that maybe we need the most.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

And it's back to, you know, what we were saying earlier is, uh, having the courage

Adrian:

to step into that abyss, that unknown.

Adrian:

And, and having the faith that that's where the medicine is.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Kate:

Well, I think that's the perfect place to wrap things up and that way you

Kate:

can go be with your dogs and your wife, , tell everyone where to find you and

Kate:

where to find, where to find earth speed.

Kate:

I really enjoyed diving deep into the earth speed videos that are on

Kate:

YouTube, so I'll put my call out to everybody to explore that, to explore.

Kate:

You have some great mentors on there, Zach Bush, Jamie Wheel, uh, Ryan Engelhart.

Kate:

Like there's some, there's some really cool conversations that are unfolding in

Adrian:

those videos.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Thank you.

Adrian:

And you're next.

Adrian:

We gotta get you . I appreciate that in the hot, hot seat.

Adrian:

I would love that.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

So we're at, at earth speed and, uh, across all the channels, Instagram,

Adrian:

YouTube, primarily, although we just recently got our YouTube channel.

Adrian:

Reinstated because the algorithm ti Tyranny had us blackballed for, for some

Adrian:

stupid reasons, mis or disinformation about the speed of earth or something.

Adrian:

I don't

Kate:

know.

Kate:

Yeah, that's, that's how YouTube likes us disconnected.

Adrian:

Right, exactly.

Adrian:

So anyway, we just got that back and, um, starting to contribute there as well.

Adrian:

So yeah, earth speed.

Adrian:

And you can also find me as well at Adrian

Kate:

Grier.

Kate:

We'll have links to all of these things.

Kate:

I wanna thank you and I, one of the things I really wanna thank

Kate:

you for is sharing your story.

Kate:

I, it's a, it's a vulnerable thing to do, and as I listen to some of these

Kate:

podcasts that you've been on, that I'll, I'll link in the show notes.

Kate:

I think that by sharing our stories, people have an opportunity

Kate:

to have sparks and beginnings of their own transformations.

Kate:

. And so thank you for doing that because it's, it's not an easy

Kate:

thing to do and I, I do think it makes, makes a big difference.

Adrian:

Thank you.

Adrian:

I appreciate that.

Adrian:

Yeah.

Adrian:

For that acknowledgement.

Adrian:

Thank you.

Kate:

Yeah, it was a pleasure.

Adrian:

Likewise.

Kate:

Thank you so much for listening to this episode of

Kate:

The Mind, body and Soil Podcast.

Kate:

If what you found resonated with you, may I ask that you share it with

Kate:

your friends or leave us a rating and review wherever you listen to podcasts.

Kate:

This act of reciprocity helps others find mind, body, and soil.

Kate:

If you're looking for more, you can find us@groundworkcollective.com

Kate:

and at Kate underscore Kavanaugh.

Kate:

That's k a t e underscore K A V A N A U G H On Instagram.

Kate:

I would like to give a very special thank you to China and Seth Kent of the

Kate:

band, allright Allright for the clips from their beautiful song over the

Kate:

Edge from their album, the Crucible.

Kate:

You can find them at Allright allright on Instagram and

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